MUST AVERAGES HAPPEN? 57 students, average score in an exam 73.25. Must one students have scored 73.25? What goes up must come down. OK, but … must the.

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Presentation on theme: "MUST AVERAGES HAPPEN? 57 students, average score in an exam 73.25. Must one students have scored 73.25? What goes up must come down. OK, but … must the."— Presentation transcript:

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MUST AVERAGES HAPPEN? 57 students, average score in an exam 73.25. Must one students have scored 73.25? What goes up must come down. OK, but … must the velocity become 0 sometimes? Takes me two hours to go to Chicago, 90 miles away. Must I have gone at 45 miles/hour sometime? A better story: Police car no. 1, standing at mile 77 (the South Bend/Notre Dame exit) at 14:45 sees a Maserati Gran Turismo going by westbound at 55 mph.

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The speed limit on the Indiana Toll Road is 70 mph. Police car no. 1 calls Police car no. 2, standing at mile 50 (the LaPorte exit, 27 miles west of mile 77) and tells them to be on the lookout for that gorgeous Maserati. (A $250,000 car.) At 15:00 Police car no. 2 radios no. 1 saying they just saw the Maserati go by. Car no. 1 radios back, Stop him, he broke the speed limit ! How did Police car no 1. know?

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Our brain gives different answers in the four situations presented: NO, no student must have scored the average, but … YES, the stone must eventually hit velocity 0 YES, I must have gone at 45 mph somewhere between here and Chicago and … YES, the Maserati broke the speed limit because … The difference is that in the exam case we have a finite (discrete) collection of data; In the other three we have a continuous set of data (actually, just to teach you another word, intervals of real numbers have a property called completeness that our brain senses and makes us give correct answers)

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The main result, which our brain senses, is the following statement (Mean Value Theorem) Theorem. Let be 1Continuous on and 2Differentiable on. Then for some Note: this says that the tangent line at Is parallel to the secant joining and

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When faced with a statement like our theorem, Inquiring minds want to know …… What? Are those two conditions really needed to guarantee the conclusion? The answer is YES, absolutely ! Lets deny 1 (and keep 2). Trouble is that 2 implies continuity on, so we can only break continuity at either (or both) end-points. Here is a figure that does it for us.

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The secant has slope, but all tangents have slope ! Therefore condition 1 is absolutely needed. To see that condition 2 is also needed, draw a picture of a roof, or of a cusp and look: the secant has slope 0, all tangents (where they exist) have non-zero slopes.

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Having satisfied our inquiring minds, we proceed with the proof. Following tradition (and the textbook !) we look first at the case when the secant is horizontal. This is known as Rolles theorem; besides being relatively easy to prove and acknowledging Rolles contribution to mathematics, the general case will (couldnt resist the pun !) roll right out. So, we have to show that, under conditions 1 and 2, if the secant is horizontal then for some.

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From condition 1 (and the Extreme Value Theo- rem) we get that there are two points and where achieves its max- imum and minimum. If either or are inside the open interval we are done, the derivative exists there, and is therefore. But if both and are end-points, then and are both maxima and minima of the function, that is the function is a constant!, there are as many s as one wants ! Rolles is proved.

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The general case follows from Rolles theorem through a bit of algebraic magic. We define a new function and observe that it satisfies the hypotheses of Rolles theorem, that is is differentiable on and continuous on and (check it out !) Therefore, for some QED

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Remark. The bit of algebraic magic is not so … magical ! The figure below shows that the function is just the (vertical) distance between and the secant

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This remarkable, beautiful theorem is very help- ful in catching speeding Maserati Gran Turismos, it essentially assures us that the computed aver- age (in the continuous case) DOES HAPPEN ! Like many other existence theorems in Mathe- matics (there exists a …) it does not tell us how to actually find that ! But in the case of the MVT it is actually easy to find all those s ! Set slope of secant, and solve for.

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Here is an example, without figure. Find all the values of that satisfy the MVT for the function Aswer. The function is continuous and differentiable over the given interval, therefore the MVT applies. We have: Therefore the slope of the secant is. The equation becomes

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that has solutions So in this example there are two tangents that are parallel to the secant. Now do some more from the textbook.